The Texas Senate: Republic to Civil War, 1836-1861

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Patsy McDonald Spaw
Texas A&M University Press, 1990 - 408 páginas
The first Congress of the Republic of Texas met October 3, 1836, in Columbia in a large dog-trot house "meager in every respect." The fourteen senators who convened there must have been amazed at the circumstances that brought them together and fearful of the impermanence of their offices. Only a year earlier the representative body of their territory had been a provincial government of the Republic of Mexico, and not too long before that, residents of the region had sworn fealty to a Spanish king. On this autumn day, however, the inhabitants of the lands north of the Rio Grande were calling themselves Texans, creators and citizens of a country recognized only by themselves as the Republic of Texas. So begins The Texas Senate, which charts events, both grand and small, that have marked the legislative history of the republic and the state. This volume, the first of five, is written by members of the Senate Engrossing and Enrolling Department and edited by Enrolling Clerk Patsy McDonald Spaw. Leading off the volume, which covers the period up to secession, is a foreword by Lieutenant Governor William P. Hobby. Sources for the history include the Senate journals, the letters and private papers of senators, newspapers of the era, committee reports, and other primary sources, as well as general and specialized histories of the topics. More than fifty illustrations and eighteen appendices listing members of the legislative bodies (ten compiled by Thomas Phillips, chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court) add significant details. The professionally researched text tells the story of the young republic and state with forthrightness, drama, and humor. It presents information on who the members of the Senate were, vignettes of the more colorful members, issues of the day and their resolution, and interesting Senate proceedings and controversies. From the details emerges a realistic and intriguing picture of our forebears that includes rowdy drunkards, buffoons, criminals, and ne'er-do-wells, but also men and women of great courage and determination-educated, intelligent, self-sacrificing people who served Texas at great cost to themselves.
 

Contenido

The Senate of the First Congress 183637
3
The Senate of the Second Congress 183738
32
The Senate of the Third Congress 183839
50
The Senate of the Fourth Congress 183940
70
The Senate of the Fifth Congress 184o41
85
The Senate of the Sixth Congress 184142
99
The Senate of the Seventh Congress 184243
114
The Senate of the Eighth Congress 184344
127
MEMBERS OF THE THIRD CONGRESS
330
MEMBERS OF THE FOURTH CONGRESS
332
MEMBERS OF THE FIFTH CONGRESS
334
MEMBERS OF THE SIXTH CONGRESS
336
MEMBERS OF THE SEVENTH CONGRESS
338
MEMBERS OF THE EIGHTH CONGRESS
340
MEMBERS OF THE NINTH CONGRESS
343
MEMBERS OF THE TENTH CONGRESS
345

The Senate of the Ninth Congress 184445
145
Early Statehood The Senate of the First Legislature 1846
165
The Senate of the Second Legislature 184748
185
The Senate of the Third Legislature 184950
194
The Senate of the Fourth Legislature 185153
209
The Senate of the Fifth Legislature 185354
238
The Senate of the Sixth Legislature 185556
257
The Senate of the Seventh Legislature 185758
275
Secession The Senate of the Eighth Legislature 185961
301
MEMBERS OF THE FIRST CONGRESS
323
MEMBERS OF THE SECOND CONGRESS
327
MEMBERS OF THE FIRST LEGISLATURE
346
MEMBERS OF THE SECOND LEGISLATURE
348
MEMBERS OF THE THIRD LEGISLATURE
350
MEMBERS OF THE FOURTH LEGISLATURE
352
MEMBERS OF THE FIFTH LEGISLATURE
354
MEMBERS OF THE SIXTH LEGISLATURE
356
MEMBERS OF THE SEVENTH LEGISLATURE
358
Appendix R MEMBERS OF THE EIGHTH LEGISLATURE
360
A Bibliographic Essay
363
Index
370
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Página 26 - Drinking was reduced to a system, and had its own laws and regulations . . . the Texians being entirely a military people, not only fought, but drank, in platoons.

Acerca del autor (1990)

Patsy McDonald Spaw, engrossing and enrolling clerk of the Senate, wrote much of the material and supervised other staff members in the preparation of other parts, under the general direction of Betty King, secretary of the Senate. Spaw, who holds a B.A. degree from St. Edward's University and is studying law at South Texas College of Law, has twenty years of legislative experience and has held her present position since 1977.

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